K
Kazutaka Jin
Researcher at Tohoku University
Publications - 90
Citations - 1293
Kazutaka Jin is an academic researcher from Tohoku University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epilepsy & Ictal. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 78 publications receiving 1071 citations. Previous affiliations of Kazutaka Jin include Cleveland Clinic.
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A case of NMO seropositive for aquaporin-4 antibody more than 10 years before onset.
Shuhei Nishiyama,T. Ito,Tatsuro Misu,T. Takahashi,Akio Kikuchi,Naoki Suzuki,Kazutaka Jin,Masashi Aoki,Kazuo Fujihara,Yasuto Itoyama +9 more
TL;DR: A case of NMO in which AQP4 antibody was detected years before the NMO onset is reported, in which an extensive loss of AQP 4 and glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoreactivities in the perivascular regions with complement and immunoglobulin deposition in NMO suggests astrocytic impairment.
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PNES around the world: where we are now and how we can close the diagnosis and treatment gaps. An ILAE PNES Task Force report
Kousuke Kanemoto,W. Curt LaFrance,Roderick Duncan,David Gigineishvili,Sung-Pa Park,Yukari Tadokoro,Hiroko Ikeda,Ravi Paul,Dong Zhou,Go Taniguchi,Michael Patrick Kerr,Tomohiro Oshima,Kazutaka Jin,Markus Reuber +13 more
TL;DR: G gaps in care are described that result in patients with PNES not having adequate access to healthcare provisions in less developed countries.
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Transcranial magnetic stimulation alleviates truncal ataxia in spinocerebellar degeneration
TL;DR: A placebo controlled trial of TMS over the cerebellum for patients with spinocerebellar degeneration, originally introduced to the medical field to evaluate the function of the CNS, is recently becoming a therapeutic tool for neuropsychiatric disorders.
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Clinical features of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease with V180I mutation
Kazutaka Jin,Yusei Shiga,Satoshi Shibuya,Keiji Chida,Y. Sato,Hidehiko Konno,Katsumi Doh-ura,Tetsuyuki Kitamoto,Yasuto Itoyama +8 more
TL;DR: MRI demonstrated remarkable high-intensity areas with swelling in the cerebral cortex except for the medial occipital and cerebellar cortices, which are an important clue for an accurate premortem diagnosis of CJD.
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Correlations between ictal propagation and response to electrical cortical stimulation: A cortico-cortical evoked potential study
Rei Enatsu,Kazutaka Jin,Kazutaka Jin,Sherif Elwan,Sherif Elwan,Yuichi Kubota,Zhe Piao,Timothy O’Connor,Karl Horning,Richard C. Burgess,William Bingaman,Dileep Nair +11 more
TL;DR: The present findings suggest that contiguous spread is faster than non-contiguous spread, which can be explained by the enhancement of excitability around the ictal onset area.